Votes on fee increases are expected next week by each governing board.

In advance of that, on Thursday angry students at both universities are planning demonstrations to oppose fee hikes and demand tuition rollbacks.

"We're calling for a walkout at noon on Sproul Plaza," said Maggie Hardy, a sophomore at UC Berkeley. "Prop. 30 was an attempt to pacify students. We demand that the money does actually go toward lowering tuition at UC and CSU."

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But Prop. 30 provided "no windfall," UC spokesman Steve Montiel said. "It's more like we avoided a hurricane." What Prop. 30 did guarantee was that tuition would not rise this school year.

The UC regents will vote next week in San Francisco on whether to raise fees for seven professional degree programs on top of basic tuition, including a 35 percent increase for nursing students. Four other programs, including "translational medicine" at Berkeley and San Francisco, could see extra fees for the first time.

The regents will also vote on a 2013-14 budget that would raise overall tuition by an unspecified amount unless the state augments UC's budget by $126.5 million. That's on top of $125 million that UC will get next year from Prop. 30 in exchange for not raising tuition this year.

CSU will also get $125 million next year after refunding the tuition increase it imposed this fall.

CSU trustees will vote in Long Beach on whether to raise fees on three groups of students: those who linger at school after being eligible to graduate, who take extra classes, or who take the same class multiple times. CSU said it has had to turn away many students and hopes to free up space by encouraging thousands to move steadily through school.

Students are planning demonstrations at CSU campuses on Thursday.

Meanwhile, community college officials said they are ecstatic that they avoided Prop. 30's "trigger cuts." Unlike the universities, colleges will get a windfall: $210 million, expected in June, which they say will let 20,000 more students enroll.

"Over the last four years, we've seen half a million students turned away," said Brice Harris, who became chancellor of the 112-college system on Monday. "Prop. 30 will put an end to that."

At City College of San Francisco, which is struggling to remain accredited and avoid bankruptcy, the money from Prop. 30 and Prop. A, a local tax, is especially welcome. Instead of expanding its programs, however, the college will use much of its share of new money to bolster its skeletal financial reserves and pay into its underfunded retiree health program.